It looks like you didn't quite finish your last thought.
But I'll give an opinion about the first part. The kinematic sequence is well known for rotational sports. The exact timing depends on a few factors (like how long or heavy the implement is). In golf, the club is long enough and heavy enough that you need more time to transfer the speed to the clubhead than say throwing a baseball. So the pattern of the sequence will be similar, but the details will be a little different. You mentioned are the muscles more effective when fired in a sequence. For speed, yes.
That said, there is some debate on the exact graph shape and pattern. Dr. Kwon shows in his graphs that the shoulders to ribcage peaking order could be reversed depending on how the data is collected. So the exact timings of the peaks may be more stacked than first reported.
I think there are a handful of keys to learn from the sequence.
1 - Everyone shows the hips going first.
2 - Everyone shows the slopes to be somewhat similar (good use of connectors/stabilizer muscles).
3 - Everyone shows the peaking happening around delivery position and then a decelerating of the body as the wrists and club accelerate rotationally
4 - The majority of elite golfers show the club head reaching peak speed at impact (amateurs often peak early)
5 - The majority of elite golfers show the thorax moving faster than the lead arm at impact (amateurs are usually reversed)
Hopefully that helps,